How to cook this?

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lamontea

Assistant Cook
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Aug 17, 2010
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I went to France with my boyfriend last month and we ate this at a pub there.My boyfriend loves the sliced potatoes very much. He said that the potatoes had a very creamy taste and some cheese on them. I am wondering if anyone knows what it is called or how to cook it? Thanks a lot in advance!
 

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I went to France with my boyfriend last month and we ate this at a pub there.My boyfriend loves the sliced potatoes very much. He said that the potatoes had a very creamy taste and some cheese on them. I am wondering if anyone knows what it is called or how to cook it? Thanks a lot in advance!

Now.. that looks undeniably like potato dauphinoise, of which I have a recipe.
BRB ;)


Here we are, then. Also known as gratin dauphinoise

img_914833_0_6576a90708fab525539dbe2e927a3acd.jpg

Gratin dauphinoise. Photograph: Jonathan Lovekin

This beautiful recipe is by Nigel Slater, our UK's well-loved cook of whom our brasserie make many of his fine dishes.

(His words)
At its simplest, gratin dauphinoise is a dish of thinly sliced potatoes baked slowly with cream and the merest hint of garlic. Some recipes include cheese, but I disagree. The dish is perfect with roast spring lamb, though I have been known to eat it as it is with a green salad to mop my plate. The potatoes are generally the yellow waxy sort so the slices keep their shape, though some of us prefer the collapsing floury varieties. A shallow, earthenware dish is the traditional cookware used.

The recipe
Peel and thinly slice 2.2lbs / 1kg of waxy potatoes. Halve a juicy clove of garlic and rub it round the inside of a shallow baking dish, rub the dish with a little butter then put in the layers of potatoes, seasoning with salt and pepper as you go. Pour over 600ml of scalded double cream. Bake for about an hour and a half at 320F / 160C/gas mark 3.

The trick
Restraint with the garlic will be rewarded. The dish needs just a faint whiff of the bulb, and wiping the base and sides before adding the potatoes produces something more authentic than adding it crushed or sliced. Don't skimp on the cream as the top layer of potatoes will dry out. Most importantly, don't cut the potatoes too thickly. That way they take forever to cook and the cream will evaporate long before the potatoes are tender. The dish needs long, slow cooking.

The twist
There are many variations, some of which include grated Gruyère or Parmesan, dried porcini, anchovies and even eggs. I tuck pieces of smoked mackerel in mine if I am making it more of a main course, or pancetta. Incidentally, those perfectly round mounds of "dauph" you get so often in Parisian restaurants nowadays are straight from the freezer aisle at the cash and carry.
 
Last edited:
Now.. that looks undeniably like potato dauphinoise, of which I have a recipe.
BRB ;)


Here we are, then. Also known as gratin dauphinoise

img_914837_0_6576a90708fab525539dbe2e927a3acd.jpg

Gratin dauphinoise. Photograph: Jonathan Lovekin

This beautiful recipe is by Nigel Slater, our UK's well-loved cook of whom our brasserie make many of his fine dishes.

(His words)
At its simplest, gratin dauphinoise is a dish of thinly sliced potatoes baked slowly with cream and the merest hint of garlic. Some recipes include cheese, but I disagree. The dish is perfect with roast spring lamb, though I have been known to eat it as it is with a green salad to mop my plate. The potatoes are generally the yellow waxy sort so the slices keep their shape, though some of us prefer the collapsing floury varieties. A shallow, earthenware dish is the traditional cookware used.

The recipe
Peel and thinly slice 2.2lbs / 1kg of waxy potatoes. Halve a juicy clove of garlic and rub it round the inside of a shallow baking dish, rub the dish with a little butter then put in the layers of potatoes, seasoning with salt and pepper as you go. Pour over 600ml of scalded double cream. Bake for about an hour and a half at 320F / 160C/gas mark 3.

The trick
Restraint with the garlic will be rewarded. The dish needs just a faint whiff of the bulb, and wiping the base and sides before adding the potatoes produces something more authentic than adding it crushed or sliced. Don't skimp on the cream as the top layer of potatoes will dry out. Most importantly, don't cut the potatoes too thickly. That way they take forever to cook and the cream will evaporate long before the potatoes are tender. The dish needs long, slow cooking.

The twist
There are many variations, some of which include grated Gruyère or Parmesan, dried porcini, anchovies and even eggs. I tuck pieces of smoked mackerel in mine if I am making it more of a main course, or pancetta. Incidentally, those perfectly round mounds of "dauph" you get so often in Parisian restaurants nowadays are straight from the freezer aisle at the cash and carry.
Thanks for telling me what it is!
 
Thanks for telling me what it is!

I use a mandoline slicer, so to get the potato slices as thin as possible. But this device can be highly dangerous on fingers if you don't know how to use it properly. I suggest, therefore, you sharpen your cook's knife to razor-sharp, then you will get your tater slices nice and thin.

Remember, a sharp knife never slips. ;)
 
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